- Tom Uren
Thomas Uren, AO (born
28 May 1921 ),Australia n politician, was a minister in the Whitlam and HawkeAustralian Labor Party governments. He helped establish the heritage and conservation movement in Australia and, in particular, worked to preserve the heritage of innerSydney .Early life
Uren was born in Balmain, Sydney, then a working-class suburb, and was educated at Manly High School. Uren played
rugby league for Manly Warringah in his youth and was a strong competitive swimmer. He had an early career as a professional boxer and challenged for the Australian heavyweight championship againstBilly Britt . cite web
title = Papers of Tom Uren (1921- )
publisher =National Library of Australia
url = http://nla.gov.au/nla.ms-ms5816
accessdate = 2008-02-08 ] cite web
publisher=Green Left Weekly Online Edition
title=Tom Uren's account of an era
date=16 November 1994
url=http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/1994/167/167p27.htm
accessdate = 2008-02-08 ]In 1941, Uren joined the
Australian Army and served in the 2/40th Infantry Battalion. He was deployed to Timor and was a prisoner of theJapan ese from 1942 to 1945, during which time he worked on the Burma-Siam railway and served with Edward "Weary" Dunlop. He was later transferred to Japan where he witnessed the distant crimson sky resulting from the explosion of the US atom bomb on Nagasaki. cite web
publisher=Evatt Foundation
first=Tom
last=Uren
title=Our mission for this new millenium
date=23 April 2002
url=http://evatt.labor.net.au/news/32.html
accessdate = 2008-02-08 ] He was discharged in December, 1945 with the rank ofBombardier . [ [http://www.ww2roll.gov.au/script/veteran.asp?ServiceID=A&VeteranID=156497 World War II Nominal Roll] ]After the war Uren spent a short time trying to revive his boxing career which included a trip to England and he worked for his passage on voyages through the
Panama Canal . On return he spent some time as a Woolworths manager atLithgow . He was inspired to join theAustralian Labor Party after attendingBen Chifley 's funeral. He and his wife, Patricia, moved to Sydney and established two small retailing outlets to gain the financial independence to pursue a political career.Political career
Uren won Labor pre-selection in 1957 for the House of Representatives seat of Reid in western Sydney, which he won at the 1958 election. He was to represent the electorate until his retirement before the 1990 election, thirty two years later.
Uren was a strong supporter of the left wing of the Labor Party, led at first by
Eddie Ward and later byJim Cairns , and was sometimes accused of being a secret communist, an accusation he denied. He campaigned against theVietnam War ,conscription andnuclear testing .In 1969 Uren was appointed by
Gough Whitlam to the Opposition front bench with responsibility for housing and urban affairs, which became his passion for the rest of his career. He was Minister for Urban and Regional Development in the Whitlam government from 1972 to 1975. He established the Australian Heritage Commission and consequent compilation of the Register of the National Estate. In Sydney, he promoted the restoration and re-use of derelict inner city areas such as the Glebe Estate and Woolloomooloo, the reclamation of Duck Creek and the creation of the Chipping Norton Lakes Scheme. cite web
title=Tom Uren AO
publisher=University of Sydney
date=8 November 2002
url=http://www.usyd.edu.au/senate/committees/advisoryTUren.shtml
accessdate = 2008-02-08 ] He was a key player in the creation of theTowra Point Nature Reserve .Fact|date=February 2008 Despite his rhetoric as a firebrand, he proved a highly competent minister and was one of the few ministers to emerge from the fall of the Whitlam government with his reputation enhanced.Fact|date=February 2008In 1976 Uren was elected Deputy Leader of the Labor Party under Whitlam as Opposition Leader, but after the 1977 election, when
Bill Hayden was elected Leader, he was replaced byLionel Bowen . He succeeded Cairns as leader of the ALP Left, and bitterly opposedBob Hawke 's rise to the Labor leadership.Fact|date=February 2008 As a result, when the Hawke government won the 1983 election, Uren was omitted from the Cabinet - he was given the junior portfolio of Minister for Territories and Local Government, and from 1984 to 1987 Local Government and Administrative Services.Uren stood down from the ministry after the 1987 election election and retired from Parliament in 1990. He was the last veteran of
World War II in the House of Representatives. In retirement he continues to campaign for various causes, including the protection of Sydney Harbour and its foreshores. He opposes Australia's participation in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.Notes
References
*cite book | author=Tom Uren | title=Straight Left | publisher=Random House Australia, | year=1995 | id=ISBN 0-09-182998-4
Persondata
NAME = Uren, Thomas
ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Uren, Tom
SHORT DESCRIPTION =Australia n politician
DATE OF BIRTH =28 May 1921
PLACE OF BIRTH =Balmain, New South Wales
DATE OF DEATH = Living person
PLACE OF DEATH =
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